Unidentifiable coin error / variety???

I have Some quarters and nickels that have unusually strange surfaces. Can anyone tell me if they are worth keeping?
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I have Some quarters and nickels that have unusually strange surfaces. Can anyone tell me if they are worth keeping?
Comments
Some combination of circulation and other damage.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Those are nor error coins. All damaged.
I have several of this kind of error coins. There are all kinds of things going on. Can someone identify what this is, and direct me in what I should do with them? Are they even worth messing with?
Spend them.
Wayne
Kennedys are my quest...
Beaten all to crap. Spend them if anyone will take them.
The 72 is just a worn coin. The other 2 seem to have acid damage on them - SPENDERS like previously stated.
"When they can't find anything wrong with you, they create it!"
@mgary1117 ... All circulation and post mint damage. No numismatic premium.
@PBoss... Your cent has Post Mint Damage (PMD).... No numismatic premium.
Cheers, RickO
Nah, put 'em on Etsy. Each at, oh, $40k or so.
I blew it up so y'all can see the patterns letters and numbers. I'm sure some is post mint. I have a few examples of this kind of stuff.
I pick up the pennies I find in the street when I'm walking my dogs. They look just like yours. Not an error, they're damaged.
all coins pictured are damaged
Thank everyone for their responses. As always, they are greatly appreciated.
The quarters are washer coins. I found over 400 of them in two boxes. I may start a washer coins state quarter and national parks sets with just washer coins. Seems that there are a lot of these, but only quarters. I don't know why.
looks like metal detector finds that were on the beach for awhile.